lf it's Good For the lslancl The Guardlan is For it - ~. VOL. LXXV. N0. 175 lo fiumndiin WEATHER Cloudy with widely scattered showers. South winds 15, becoming West 15 by evening. Low-high at Clrtown 58 and 63. “Covers Prince .Edward Island Like 77ie Dew " 7% ell -s S r Miss lda Maclfay. Mt. stew- ; MRIAL Rose Bowl Pa-Essnrso from.Mrs. Sonia M:-icllac. dan- I art. right. receives the Esben l ghtcr of the late Mr. Arnfast. Arnfast Memorial Rose Bowl l for her win at the Parkdale REGINA (CPl—-A special ses- sion of the Saskatchewan legis- lature to incorporate in legisla- tlon the 29 points of the Saska- loon medical care agreement likely will begin next week. Premier Woodrow Lloyd saidl Thursday. l The premier said the session; might be delayed if government ; legal experts cannot prepare the I legislation soon. ! The Saskatoon agreement pro- l vided that doctors could prac-, lise outside the medical care‘ act and indications were many would elect to do so. 5 it w be up to patientsl to decide whether to seek relm- ‘ bursement for medical service; from e med care insur-l once commission. which admin-_ lsters the act. ; Dr. J. B. Mesbur. prcsidentl of the Regina and District Medi- cal Society. said Thursday no. doctors in Regina would work; under the government plan ex- cept seven working for a co- operative cllnic here. "Doctors will encourage ev- eryone to purchase package deals from the voluntary pre- paid plans." he said. The main voluntary plans in Saskatche- wan. Medical Services incorpo- rated and Group Medical Serv- ices are doctor-operated. OFFER NEW CONTRACT .. A esman for GMS said the organisation as soon as pos- sible will offer its subscribers , a new contract and service de- signed to meet the needs of pa- Soblen Loses First Round LONDON (AP) -. Tsrael‘s in- terior ministry d Britain's Court of Appeal dealt succes- hlow uraday '3 tohope tising outside the medical care" act. - G. S. Adshead. GMS p dent. said the charge for serv-e ices will be nominal and suffi-; cient only to cover costs of ad-ll I I si- . l D Dr. Mesbur earlier suggestedl Rose Show yesterday. Her ls- abel Harkness rose was judg- untary agencies should be non-; rofit. the charge mig t a family . for one year’s coverage. ' Mr. Adshead also announced; Continued on- Page 3 Col. 1) r l ministration. The Saskatoon. Nehru ls Determined lo Buy Sov By HENRY S.’ BRADSHER 5 NEW DELHI (AP) -— Prime‘ Minister Nehru has decided to‘; push ahead with a plan to buy- tand manufacture Soviet MiG. fighters in India despite efforts of the United States and Britain (.0 steer him off the deal. author- itative sources said Thursday. A team of Indian experts will go to Moscow next month open formal negotiations on the technical and financial aspects of the Soviet offer, which has been hanging fire for months. Informants said their report will be studied by the cabinet before any agreement is signed. The plan calls for the possible purchase of two squadrons of Soviet jets and setting up a plant to build more in India. Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan talked with Nehru Wednesday during ‘a stopover here and sources said- the prime minister got the im- pression Moscow is still willing to go through with the deal. First reports that India was thinking of equipping its air rce with Soviet fighters caused alarm in -Western em- bassies here. U.S. Ambassador gogvzrnment Washington would consider the purchase of Milk military aid. By ARCH MMSKENZIE [ OTTAWA (CP)-Doubt is that the govern- So far. compensation for more than.lti.0M Ontario and Quebec hogs slaughtered in the _diseII8- w‘H§1g5.1'o.filND-ll .13 # Embargo On Pork Beheved la . . 1 market value for each slain an- jm th let Planes l l Nehru has always professcdl, a policy of rejecting outsidei minlitary help as distinct from . economic aid. ' Britain tried to stave off thel Indian-Soviet jet deal by offer- to s Nehru supersonic fighters but the Indians were reported to regard them as no- suitable. a-. B N I I """""""- CHARLO'l'l‘E'l'0WN. CANADA, FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1962. Drug S[udylFOR CANADA Neg,‘-go" snvnN"caN'rs 14 r>.u"‘:cs I launched y Ottawa OTTAWA (CP) — The federal health department has launched a pilot study the medical background of the use of the drug thalidomide. blamed for the birth of deformed babies. A spokesman said the study was started some months ago by a committee headed by Dr. Jean Webb. chief of the child and maternal health divi- sion of the health department. The pilot survey is alme chiefly at establishing a proce- dure by which medical informa- . tlon on the use of the drug and its consequences can be com- piled nationally. The spokesman said the study was medical and scientific and. had no direct bearing on spe-l cific cases of malformed babies’ born in the Ottawa area. l U.K. Gains Concessions In Common Market Deal Insurgent Troops ..Threaten Algiers night to push into this fortified capital city and clear the way for a new government. Bloody fighting could result. ALGIERS — Troops of Al-. ‘gm-his puma; Deputy pm. central government of Premier 1 mier A-nmed Ben-Bella, were re- B“ l ted re aring Thursda man“ 9°" 9 P V city Thursday. Thousands more By EDDY GILMORE ‘ LONDON (AP) _. Princess? Margaret has taken up water skiing. But the Princess does it. dif- ferently than Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy. In photographs of the U.S. president's wife in action on the water. published here last week. Mrs Kennedy was shown skiing Shots taken at long range showed Mrs. Kenna: y barelegged and hare-armed. In a picture of the Queen's sister —— splashed on the front page Beaverbrook's Daily Express 'l‘hursday--Mar- garct was shown skiing in a skin-tight rubber suit. l The difference between Brit-l chilly summer weather and the torrid temperatures in, the United States probably ac-;’ count for the difference in garb. 3 l HEADGEAR DIFFERENCE 1 Margaret also donned a flow- ered French bathing cap. The wife of the president ap- parently prefers s plain, head- hugging cap. Mrs. Kennedy seemed at ease and even smiling as she ripped over the waters behind a power- boal.. The princess looked apprehen- sive. clutching the towing bar and rope as if holding on for dear life. As her instructor. Princess D - 5 ’.H'!STORY or NEAR SCAN DAL’ Halifax%Coun’ryls Old.lai| Rocked By Controversy HALIFAX fCP)——lf it isn't one crisis its another for the cient Halifax County jail. which now finds its foundations rocked by. another controversy. The latest chapter in its re- cent history of storm and near- scandal is a report that secur- ity is so lax at the jail in down- town Halifax that jailer Joseph their Anthony wants to fire four of his eight guards. At a special meeting Wed- nesday of the county welfare Unlikely control program‘ has cost roughly 323.000. officials said 'l‘hursdI.v. No developments have been announced cs it was stated Wednesday that the. llllhly-com taglous virus disease-harmless to humans-—had been located on 3 Ontario farms audit in One- bec. an increase of three from Wednesday. . so far. government compen- tion based on the current Vere quarantine on four Quebec counties. Il.AME,U.I. PORK That outbreak. like the cur- U. pork being fed in urban" hogs. It was Ilsa worst committee. which administers the jail. Mr. Anthony outlined some recent examples of his ‘problems: A guard saw a prisoner try- ing to pick . ck on his handcuffs with a comb but did‘ nothing about it; ' Guards heard two prisoners break through the ceiling of cells into the attic. but didn't investigate: Guards decline to attend se- curity lectures by the deputy sheriff; , Guards neglected to keep records which show what pris- oners’ are in jail and what ones are out on bail. LISTS OTHER PROBLEMS . lie alsogcomplained there was too much borssplay among the guards and prisoners. that guards were buying at cut-rate prices clotlies from prisoners being sent to penitentiary. some guards had liquor in the is . board. and that guards showed trustees stay up te to watch a television set the guards had purchased He added that many of his ‘regulations were treated with contempt by guards who were under the impression they couldn't be . .u . County of Halifax. is scheduled for replacement which in been hastened by public reaction to Jrwovaarsllotlleilllburlt _ _ lMeg Tries Water Skiing For Sport ed the best in the show. (Story l on page 3). l Special Session May Open On Medicare Next Week tients whose doctors are prac-(agreement stipulated that vol- . in a. bathing suit. Margaret has her husband. Lord Snowdon. American spaceman Col. John Glenn was said to be Mrs. Ken- nedy’s coach—-with the presi- dent looking on approvingly from a yacht. Mrs. Kcnnedy’s skiing waters are land The princess chose :1 small secluded lake near London. Water skiing is the second vigorous outdoor pasttime em- braced by the Princess in re- cent weeks. Earlier this year. she jumped on the back of a motorcycle behind her husband. Highway Br Threatenecl PENOBSQUIS. N.B. New Brunswick farmer who claims the federal government owes him money for land it is using for the Trans - Canada Highway threatened today to erect a barricade on the High- way and collect tolls. Ray A. McFarlane who owns land about four miles from this southeastern New Brunswick ‘ age. has erected signs at each end of a half-mile uncom- pleted stretch saying that the land has not been paid for. > urea of sexual relations‘ be- tween male and female inmates. FOLK SONGS ARE POPULAR Folksinger. Alan Mills and ,accompsnist. Peter Weldon . a a a Saint Dunstan's Untvessi last nilht. with In his srsaslnssca with disclos- fllCana isnnrolrI!IIIfI°Il|0 off the coast of New Eng-. lCPl— .5 lcAa PARKING CAUSES SPAT l NEW YORK (AP) ._ Haiti’: ambassador to the United Na- tions got into hot water Wed- nesday for parking in front of a fire hydranl.. . Fire Commissioner Edward Thompson. heading in city crack-down on such parking. emphasized that all cars would be towed away. "diplo- . Biggest Hurdle Taken Already By ROBERT MAUTKNER and the Commonwealth and BRUSSELS (Reuters)—Minis- other non member countries ters negotiating Britain's entry concerned. sources close to the into the ommon arket went talks said. back into conference Thursday Britain originally had asked night after overcoming the big- that if world commodity agree- Troops backing the wobbly’ Youssef _Ben Khedda ed all approaches to the lwere holed up in the Kabylic ‘Mountains east of this seaport.‘ Eat}? immunity "°twm‘S"'"d' 395* hurdle l|1ihei8lkS—special,ments are not signed by 1970. ‘Their leaders called for wide- D'ip10mats- cars like that 0, ‘:i1:sa.t.t'e':nep'elrtatel?rC (Eh; mBor%:l é§on“r:pr$1:)8]]"\:Ieafl(;;)1?is3'l§l1Sldfr(l))tPI-I l - spread resistance to Ben Bella. Ham Ambagsador Carla Au ted b Europe in mugmy um * ' *~ nor y 3 lg, dd _ Ht 1 _ wealth partners. laloneen in tehe arambmfg g‘:Wem_ gustc. normally ‘are immune l The six _. prance, west Gel-_ same quantities ,5 now an ‘ment building — presented a to tram‘: regulations‘ - . ".'a"y' Italy‘ L“x°mb°“rg' Bel‘ lake" by Britain- calm fl-om" He and his Anna. A“g“5te 3°‘ ""0 3 ml“ Wm‘ Slum find The Nethel'1andS— The sources said the negotia- officials ‘when they prepared w his car away. He got to tors held a “tough" discussion on arrangements for temperate t M- - t AM 1h 1- _ eed special concessions men 5 ""5 er 6 3 Id Bo" for Canada. Australia and New 0 f. d f'd th t . . . fiivzryfgfilrgsifill cg: Iarerxéfigcdé. 11}. and dl‘0Ve 017- Eire 0ifl- Zealand if world commodity foodstuffs exported by Canada, Two vicepremiers loyal ' cials caught up with_ him isgreements had not been Australia and New Zealand lBen Khedda toured the Kabylie “am at l“‘ °m°°' °"l5‘d° ‘’f l signed by 1970- g d ' g the transitional period = area and addressed a m-ass which his car had bee The problem- of alternativeiendjng 1n 1 o_ ‘markets for farm products ex-l The seven ministers after- . ported by the three countries§ ward went back into session for ‘has been the Stumbling blockl what conference chairman ‘which has throttled progress of Emilio Colombo of Italy des- 531'"-‘S5 me? ‘the h€E0ll3ti0!IS- ‘ cribcd as “a good discussion." He said in French through . British and Common Market During an intermission in an interpreter: ‘ officials agreed that if the prob- Thursday's negotiations the "I'm an ambassador! Why lem of alternative markets common Market council of min- couldn’t you go through the ‘could be solved. Britain's entry isters discussed quota restric- proper c h a n n e 1 s? Why . into the trading group was vir-f tions on imports from the Com- couldn‘t you give a written tually assured. munist bloc. but no final decf_ report? I'm an ambassador‘ d to I don. hm ,,, Stan ; ARRANGE AGREEMENTS ‘‘°“ W“ ’‘’'”“"°''‘ - .-- «The spa c ial arrangements which the Common Market would make would take the . form of commodity agreements ‘between the Common Market parked—in front of a hydrant. Auguste was incensed. “Why do you bring all these people in my office and em- rally in the Mediterranean port of Bougie. They are Bolkacom Krim and Mohammed Boudiaf., who have vowed to fight Ben Bella ‘V blood. ;EUROPEANS FLEE l More thousands of Europeans ‘who had lived through the months of terror preceding in- dependence were leaving Al- giers as iurther chaos loomed. President de Gaulle's French government watched the situa- lion closely. But government sources in Paris said the 400.- (Continued on Page 3 Col. 7; Mac Gets Confidence Vot .:‘to the last drop of our ‘Medical FE? Dispute Encls ‘ VIENNA. Austria (AP) - Vienna doctors and the Health Insurance Institute ended a dis- _ pute Thursday over fees which .. E‘ s. Then he had his secretary get all the fire officials‘ names. ’ ‘ was highlighted by a one-day ‘doctors’ strike July 9. The institute agreed to in- crease fees by July 30-although not to the extent asked by the i. . 16 fdoct.ors—and to negotiate later :5‘? mm censure """'°" "l ml on a general reorganization of ' - 3 ments. The vote followed a stormy my debate and speech by Macmil-I, fan in answer to Labor’: calll for the government to resign. hold immediate elections.’ In his a p e e c h. Macmillanl vowed to curb “undue" profits} if this was necessary to support‘ theicgyovemmem ' wage restraml - leaders planned their next inte- The' unexpected pledge was: gram Th m°,;'eS ,,b°.',‘,'“d, close‘; - - oors urs av e ace seen as a move to attract pub- 3 3 new W-3m.in'g from Go.,_.,-n_,,- lic support for the Conservativel Ernest vmdi ‘e, that furme, - PARIS ‘R9“l°1’5)"The H°"5"- But in fact they appeared 3°V°"‘me“l5 ‘"‘P°P“l3" "Paylviolence would bring state ae- ‘ of Dior Thursday adoptedlfor slightly mnger and not . single. pause" policy. lfion_ " Party Supports-~$»t~rongly.l 1 LONDON (CPl—Prime Minis-' Commons Thursday night as hill lter Macmillan won a vote of‘Conservative party rallied be- t confidence in the Ho u s c oft hind him to defeat a Labor ’op-‘ «Dior Accepts Fashions Women Wearing Now By PEGGY MASSIN ‘been for the past two seasons." _..._.. Integration Try Planned ALBANY. Ga. 'APl -- Negro E n. E “8 1llXl1l‘.Y trade the Style hat kneecap saw the light of day inl Macmillan said the govern- An air of expectancy hung K ment would restrain any undue. over this south Georgia city as jgrowth in profits “by fiscal nr5Negroes ended at noon a self- .any other appropriate means"l imposed clay of _:>e.nanc_ be- .if it deemed that the profits cause of rock-throwing by some ; were being made at the expense members of their race after a i‘ of workers. _ uesday night march. ; As a counter-measure-hu if New marching protests ;with none of the legal power--§against segregation had been (Macmillan said he would ap- ‘planned but it appeared uncer- gpoint an advisory permanentitain when or whether they ‘ (Continued on Page}! Col..'l) lwould materialire. ArtilicialWombls Used By Swiss Baby Doctors BELFAT (Reuters)——Swedish' It was then put into a glass doctors studying “deep freeze" jar filled with an artificial am- therapy for treating prematureé niotic fluid. a salt solution babies, h ve used an artlficiall which closely approximated I womb to bring babies born ‘ mother's water in the womb. dead back to life for short pe- The child's blood. was then riods. the British Medical Asso- oxygenated in the artificial elation was told Thursday. ‘ heart. circulation started and Delegates to the BMA's an- soon the child's heartbeat rose nual conference were shown a i0W8I‘d normal- color film of the work done all 1' W35 then taking ilxygell a Stockholm laboratory as part into its body and the return M! of the first publication of the life W85 Shown in movement of Swedish experiment. the body and heart. Swedish doctor W. B. Wcstin "“ explained that the babies used. in the experiments had not the; slightest chance of life when Notions Shore they were legally aborted from their mothers. of I The oldest fetus used was» lwomen are currently wearing the Dior ,a1on5_ with a natural- . eve startling des- .rywhere s were in a conical (waistline and no Skirt shape. worked in wide gauze. cent °f we hem‘ seamed or pleated to stand out Di0l"S Simple “CW "BWOW" away from the body at the cen- silhouette with forward jutting we f,-om The impact of the lkifl bfollshl 8 basic Change in fluid new silhouette was em- skirt treatments without revol- : phasized in profile by “at l|tl°nl2ifl8 file Paris Wl"“—"' lash‘ straight lines at the back con- ii-"! 59-'=l50"- ltrasting with the swing-out in ‘The house announced that, front. . l“hems stay where they have] (Continued on Page 3 Col. “‘!»“"'V?’3”‘*i 14 weeks and the youngest MONTREAL (cp)_slx com ““‘ iweished 0111? il|l‘¢€ in lolllfmonwealth countries. including i ounces. None lived longer than‘canada_ have reached 33,-“. 21 hours in the artificial womb. ‘ meat on; financing construction ‘of a Southeast Asia cable. Dr. in . lessons was announced Thursday. learned during the experiments Canadian Overseas Telecom- had saved the lives of more munication Corporation said in ‘ t than too Scandinavian babics’Montreal it has been advised of . { uphyxjatcd gt 1,1.-gh_ the step in a cable from Kuala '5 He explained that all the Lumpur. Malaya. where babies used in the experiments monwealth representatives have were "clinically dead" beforebeen ing to discuss the they were placed in the artiii-lprojecl. Details of fie financing cial uterus. Their vital function.-:1 were not disclosed. d ceased and they had no l chance for survival. -, part ‘The fetal child had a connec- of a submarine telephone cabb tlon made between its umbilical network spnalng the Oomsmtr t an artificial heart. lwealtll purpose on the i.our is ac- quaint the people of Canada with their own songs. mostly known only by the lumberiacks of l and fishermen of past genera- lils I done of the lesser known songs. written in Canada. Mr. Mills. is currently on a tour of Uni- versities and will sing in Fred- osiction at the University New Brunswick. Monday.